It's Friday - time for our weekly trip down blog memory lane!
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Wintry Weather Favorites
{Originally posted January 4, 2008}
So...we've had some serious snow around these parts.The word is that this is the most snow we've had this
early in the season in something like 40 years. The kids are beside
themselves with glee at the outdoor play land we've got going on: cross
country skiing, skating, sledding, snowshoeing, and generally rolling
around in the powder...and Steve and Calvin are downright giddy about
hitting the mountains for some downhill action this year too.For now, and for the most part - I'm rather enjoying all the snow.
It's beautiful out there! And inside is the pleasure of January
nesting - we're getting in some serious couch time; drinking lots of
cocoa and tea; playing more Animal Yahtzee than I ever thought
possible; making lots of everything; and doing lots of reading. The
couch and quilts and a pile of books are where it's at right now.
In that light, I thought I'd put together a reading list
of our favorite books from our Winter basket, and perhaps share a new list as each season begins this year.
Our Favorite Wintry Reads!
(A few that made their way onto the holiday list I did in November that really apply here too: Owl Moon - Jane Yolen; Snow - Uri Shulevitz; The Big Snow - Berta and Elmer Hader; The Story of the Snow Children - Sibylle Von Olfers; Winter - Gerda Muller )
And the rest...
Snowflake Bentley - Jacqueline Briggs Martin
I love this story - I love finding children's books that tell the true
story of people following their passions. This story tells the tale of Wilson Bentley, the snowflake guy!
This book usually inspired a great flood of snowflake making in this
house, which I feel coming on pretty soon. Gotta stock up on my coffee filters. I keep adding Snow Crystals - one of Bentley's books - to my wish list, but it hasn't made it's way in yet. Maybe this winter.
Flannel Kisses - Linda Crotta Brennan
This
was a recommend from our last book list, and I'm so glad for it. It's a
short, sweet, and simple story featuring so many things we love about
winter - snow, quilts, soup, family, and coziness.
The Tomten, and The Tomten and The Fox - Astrid Lindgren
Adelaide
has a big Tomten thing going on right now - I can't even imagine how
many times I've read these books. I adore everything Astrid Lindgren
did, but these are really special, sweet stories. And just the right
length for my two year old.
Flower Fairies of the Winter - Cicely Mary Barker
I
found this book (along with the others in the collection) on a recent
clean-out of the basement. I think I had them before the children were
born, and I'm so glad I found them at a time when they can be so
enjoyed. The poetry is simple and lovely, and of course, her drawings
of the fairies and flowers are stunningly beautiful.
Grandmother Winter - Phyllis Root
I
bought this book as a holiday gift after being reminded of it on the
last book list. I'm so grateful for that reminder - it's such a sweet
tale of the origin of winter, and we've been enjoying it's cozy tone.
The Snowy Day - Ezra Jack Keats
One
of the few books I remember so fondly from my childhood. And my little
ones love it too - of course, being by "Ezra" and all makes it a whole
bunch more fascinating around here to my little guy. I love the
simplicity of this story - and the 'blanket' of snow that arrives.
Sweet, sweet.
Mr. Snow - Roger Hargreaves
I
recently rediscovered these Mr. Men and Little Miss books when Edith
& Edna started carrying them. Do you remember them? I remember
reading them as a child, and my kids are as in love with them as I
remember being. Reading them as a parent, there's a fine line between
them irritating me and enjoying the simple stories. But these books
have inspired a great deal of my kids' book making of their own
characters, so for that I do love them.
Winter Waits - Lynn Plourd
I
love this series by Lynn Plourd with of nature's 'family' personified
through characters in each season. In this book, "Winter" is a playful
young boy who sparkles in the snowy winter. This seems to be out on
Amazon, but the Author (a fellow Mainer!) has links to purchase on her
own website here.
Brambley Hedge Winter Story - Jill Barklem
Oh,
the sweet mice of Brambly Hedge...this one tells the tale of them
preparing for a magical snow ball. It appears to not be available on
Amazon, or anywhere else I can find, though perhaps I'm just confused
by the different editions. Maybe the library is the best place to find
this tale - I do think it's worth it, espeically for those who are in
between the picture book and chapter book stage.
Winter Tree Finder and Winter Weed Finder - Okay, these I don't have yet, but I just ordered them from my bookstore, and I'm really excited to see them. We have a lot of nature field guides, but I don't have any that are geared towards the landscape of winter. So I'm eagerly anticipating their arrival here for some exploring to begin. {Note: we have them - and they are great!}
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A Note Today:
Well, we certainly don't have that wintry weather right now (soon, we hope, soon!), but we definitely have the wintry weather reading. All of the above, and a few additions worth mentioning:
The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder - It seems just about this point every winter that the annual reading of this book occurs (it's in the Little House on the Prairie Series). While the boys are far into their own solo reading adventures, I love that this one chapter book is one we can gather around as a family.
Winter World by Bernd Heinrich - I seem to pick this one up and read it again each year stopping often to read aloud a tidbit to the kids. In it, Heinrich explains in fascinating detail how it is that animals survive winter.
Winter Poems by Barbara Rogasky - This was recommended to us in the original post in 2008, and we have loved adding it to our collection. It's a wonderfully diverse anthology of winter poetry, and very accessible to children.
What wintry favorites are you and yours enjoying these days? (with apologies to my southern hemisphere readers!)